RusGirl @ LBS

Thursday, October 11, 2012

With MBA recruitment
in full swing, having been on both sides of the table now, I thought I’d share
some thoughts. This would be most helpful for those seeking Industry employment
because this is where I come from.

On campus
recruitment is brutal. All the companies come at the same time and you have to
attend 5 presentations in one afternoon and then submit 10 applications in one
night. Career services gives you helpful, but often conflicting advice (“Focus
on what you want”, “Don’t put all the eggs in one basket”). But their goals are
slightly different from yours: they need as many of you employed as possible
while you want to get your dream job, whatever “dream” means for you.

Why is it
that some of your classmates collecting multiple offers while others are left
with nothing? Because on campus recruitment is aimed at picking superstars (superstar
CV, superstar story-telling/analytical/case-cracking skills). This is bad from the
candidate’s perspective, and this is bad from the company perspective as well
(we are going after the same small group of people ignoring the larger pool of
brilliant folks who don’t know how to sell themselves).

So – how do
you stand out?

First, think, in 20 years time, who do you want to be? An automotive
executive? A clean-tech energy expert? A brand strategist? An entrepreneur (in
which field)? A partner at consulting firm? A retired banker? Pick a few if you
cannot decide and work backwards on what steps you need to take you there. I
know, this is not a quick fix. But you will have to prioritise. If energy is
not on your short list, don’t apply to Shell. Even if they have a great rotational program and pay above market rate.

Second,
research the sector. Who are the main players, where the market is going, what
the challenges and opportunities are, who the disruptors are. People who work
in the industry live and breathe it every day, and your research (or lack of it)
will be very apparent in the interview. But we are not at the interview stage
yet.

Third,
identify the companies. Find the contacts you may have in these companies
(friends, current students, alumni contacts, LinkedIn 2nd degree acquaintances).
What roles they have? What background are they coming from? Is there someone there
who has a similar background to you? Where do employees in the company come
from (which companies or sectors – is there anything you can do in the interim to
strengthen your CV)? Reach out to these people. Ask for a coffee or phone conversation.
Suggest you come to their office (you can get an office tour and it shows your
dedication). Don’t wait to reach out until you have an interview invite. The
earlier you do it the better. Alums often participate in CV screening.

Don’ts

Don’t send the same email to all the alums in
the same company. Personalise. Guess what? We talk to each other.

Don’t write a long email with a long list of
questions. You can outline 2-3 questions, but suggest a personal meeting (or a phone
call if they have no time). Give them a couple of options, if you have a
deadline – share it.

Fourth,
when you get to the meeting, have good questions. This is where your sector
research comes in handy. You are there to learn about the company and culture,
the application and the interview process, not to become their best buddies.
Get the best use of the time you have.

Fifth, let
your career services know of your interest in specific companies. They talk to
the company recruiters. Sometimes they can help get you on the shortlist
if you don’t make the initial cut.

Finally,
you don’t need to attend the company presentation if you have done the steps
above. By this stage you will know enough about the company and culture to be able to write a good cover letter. And half of your classmates will quote
the presentation anyway.

Oh yes, good cover letter. If the
company asks for cover letter – write a cover letter. If you don’t, it will
come and bite you. Even if you get the first round interview, there is always
competition for the second round, and I bet the person who gets through have
written the cover letter.

Brilliant
cover letters usually have the names of people you’re spoken to, share your
personal connection and passion for the company, and (bonus points) are written
in the company style (i.e., using the language employees use). These are the
letters that get me excited.

OK cover letters are usually the ones from the
common template: I am interested in position X. Here are three paragraphs about
my skills that you mentioned in your company presentation (you see – I’ve been
there!). I am interested in working at your company because you are X. These ones are respectable. If you have a strong CV these will not shoot you down. If your CV is not relevant to the company, you've missed your chance to get an interview.

Bad
cover letters are bad in different ways. Check for the do's and don’ts below.

Do's

Spellcheck. Not just MS Word, but actually read
it (and your CV too). Every third Spanish speaker is “costumer focused” (rather
than “customer focused”).

Don’ts

Don’t write too long or too short cover letter.
Good size is between 1/5 - 2/3 of a page.

Don’t focus your letter on one specific topic.
Even if you are passionate about one specific product or recent news about the
company, mention it once and then use the space for something else. After all, you are telling your story, not reciting our press release.

Don’t extract a fact about the company from
1999 case from HBS and tell us that this is what makes us real innovators. In
fact, don’t play back the marketing message the company gave you – find out what
the company employees are actually focusing on and play that back.

Interview.
Probably worth a separate post, but to round it up. Things that make you stand
out: energy, passion and knowledge of the sector and company. And good stories
from your past experiences: where you succeeded and where you screwed up (and
what you learnt from it). Also, know yourself. If you are generally loud, tone
it down a bit (your interviewer has probably seen 5 other candidates before
you). If you are quiet, tone it
up: have some Coke, and don’t conceal your interest and passion.

If you don’t
get the job – seek feedback. Reach out to the recruiter, ask what you can
improve. Reach out to the contacts you spoke to. Some of them may be able to
get you an unofficial feedback. There will be other roles later – 6 or 12
months down the line (or even years – good research and contacts pay off, if
this is indeed the sector you want to be in long-term). Figure out what was
missing and try to bridge the gap by getting the experience in other companies. After all,
your career is a long-term game. And this is just one step on the long and
successful roadtrip.

Friday, June 13, 2008

Had my last lecture of the term today. Three final exams are still due. And after them, on Sunday morning I'm off to Switzerland for my summer internship.I hope I will have time there to share my first year experiences: about LBS life, recruitment, study groups... if anyone is still reading, stay tuned! :)

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

"Peacocks, BP and Kevin Bacon" read one of the slides we used today in group debate on Corporate Social Responsibility.Confused? Let me then start afresh.

Each Monday morning our stream has Business Ethics and Corporate Social Responsibility. The best thing about the course this year is a group debate that is held each lecture on a separate topic.For instance, last Monday two groups presented pros and cons of bribery (should a company use bribery when it operates in a country where bribery is common practice). And though the "pro" group brought chocolates for the whole audience, they lost. Sorry, guys, I voted for you :)It looked like touchy-feely side won all the time. So when we gathered last week to prepare our presentation on the pro side of "The only social responsibility of a law-abiding business is to maximize shareholders' value" the general mood was: "There's no way we can win this, so why not have some fun?"In order to prepare we had four group meetings, each time with a new central idea, including:1) Milton Friedman (he is the father of "profit as the only social responsibility"),2) The Godfather ("It's nothing personal, Sonny, it's strictly business"),3) video with Warren Buffett giving his money to Gates foundation not as a businessman but as a person,4) wheel of fortune ......and somehow ended up with peacocks (all the credit goes to the President of the Poker Club who presented it to us late on Sunday evening between two deals).

So what do peacocks, BP and Kevin Bacon have in common?Basically peacocks use bright feathers to attract peahens. And modern companies use social responsibility to attract customers. And everything you can think of, even social responsibility, can be linked in less than 6 steps to Kevin Bacon- ahem, to Profit Maximization.The "good" team that prepared slides independently was arguing that businesses should be socially responsible. Why? Well, because it's profitable to the companies... gotcha!For the first time this term in our stream, "bad" guys has won the debate :)

Monday, October 01, 2007

Term start on Monday with Ethics and Finance. This means that Pre-Term is over and we will get much busier.Meanwhile I wanted to post a couple of photos from my weekend trip to the Isle of Wight:

Beaches of Ryde during low-tide

A man and a gull

One of the famous white cliffs (near Sandown)

One evening I saw a lots of people on the esplanade: everyone was looking in their binoculars and making photos and videos. I asked a lady why were their doing that and she said, "That's the cruise ship, can't you see. It means that people are going on holiday. Come on, where's your camera? That's important!"So I made a photo too :)

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

London Business School offers a challenging assignment for the first years: it is called the Shadow project. The student has to observe an executive for up to 5 days and write a report about the experience. And since now it is optional (luckily, for many) people come with all sort of creative ideas. One of my classmateswants to shadow Steve Jobs! All I can say is "Wow! Good luck, man!" and will follow his route to the destination with great interest :)

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Long-long time ago when I was applying to business school I wanted to find out which textbooks are used in the study process and what other reading professors recommend. If there's someone out there who is as curious for books as me, the following lists are for you.

We had our Away Day today: Streams A&B (~160 people) enjoyed the whole day of outdoor activities. I've been told that it's gonna be great, but I could never imagine how great!

The first task we did was to climb a 30 feet high pole in a group of four, stand on top of it and lean backwards, holding each other (to form so called "flower"). I passed every single stage from "Never-ever" to "OK, if everyone's gonna try I want to try it too". It turned out that the hardest part for me was actually climbing to the top: my left arm ached, I had doubts about my security rope and couldn't help thinking "How am I going to stand on top?". Did I mention that the pole was very shaky? But once I clambered there (I decided to go second and it was a good idea because there's nothing better than a friend's helping hand) the rest became easy: wait for other people to climb, hold tight, lean and then let go. I loved it!

The second task was similar: we had to climb the pole in pairs and jump from it together to a trapeze. If I haven't done the "flower" exercise I would never thought of trying this one. We did a spectacular leap, but barely touched trapeze with the tips. And some of my groupmates undertook two or three attempts! Could you imagine? Perfectionists! :)The third task was to walk on ropes around a specially prepared area without touching the ground. In this case we needed to think of an algorithm since the necessary support ropes were in short supply.After that we had to assemble a puzzle on time. The task was split: we had to figure out how to assemble the puzzle in the first place, then to make up a way of dismantling it and assembling back together and (last but not least!) do this as fast as possible. In the end we did it in 17 seconds, but I've heard there was another team who did it in 10!And the last exercise was getting a "solution" for a blindfolded "client". The solution was in the middle of the "acid lake" which noone could go in. The only way to get there was build a rope system, and guide the blindfolded client towards the answer. A very hard exercise indeed and I was amazed how well out team did it!We had very good briefings after each task and came up with insightful analysis. It was also very interesting to observe how people tend to react in challenging situations: some listen, some begin to express themselves (all at once), some take lead, some drop out, some propose the ideas, some just go and do it. Great way to find out more about your classmates (and yourself)!This fantastic day ended with a training in juggling and a barbeque :)

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Following my posts on admission figures and since this was a "hot" topic for some of you, here are some interesting figures from today's presentation by David Simpson.Last year London Business School received about two thousand applications. They interviewed about half of that number. I haven't got a clue of how many people were admitted, but now we have 315 students in our class.

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

We were at school for the first day today and the most exiting part of it was finding out which stream and which study group you ended up in. Nobody would have been concerned about that if it was not for the second very question in the F.A.Q. section of Welcome Pack:Q: Can I change my study group?A: NO, man! You are stuck with those people for the whole Year One!And it went on and on for three more pages about how you should resolve conflicts in your group, how you should manage it and how you should survive it... No wonder some people were keeping their fingers crossed and prayed for nice groupmates. I was not among those sincea) no point in worring about things I have no impact on, andb) I believe that all people can get on well together as long as they are ready to compromise (the latter can be a problem, yes).Funny thing: three LBS bloggers turned to be in one Stream! I hope there will be more bloggers joining the club because we will need the diversified views on the LBS life ;)After the Sorting we had a class photo taken then a barbeque and after that most people headed off to a nearby pub. Do we really need to start classes? I will enjoy some more parties, definitely!

Friday, August 24, 2007

It’s been a week and a half since I am in London. And what a time it has been!

I arrived at Heathrow late on Monday evening and headed off to Russell Square for a weekly stay at the International Hall (I’ll write a comparison of that one to the International Student House in some later post, but shortly, if you can choose, pick International Hall). On Saturday I’ve signed the contract and moved to Angie’s place. Thanks to her, I’ve been saved from viewing a dozen of flats a day, like some of my classmates are doing right now. Talking of flat hunting: London Business School students organize pre-term fortnight of FlatHunters’ Pub Crawl.

What it’s like? It is two weeks of partying, meeting your future classmates (some 50-70 people show up every night), discovering new types of drinks (for instance, I tried Fruli and Pimm's, the latter is on the left), and practicing English. Yes, of course, people look for flatmates (we have nametags and those who are looking for flatmates draw a triangle on it) and share flat hunting experiences (like what agents are the best, how high the rent is this year). The strongest ones even go to a club afterwards: I know people who were doing that several nights in a row! Everyone seems to find flatmates really fast: last Tuesday there were lots of people looking for someone to share with – and most of them had flatmate when I talked to them on Wednesday.

The weather in London is rather cool and rainy (I haven’t used my umbrella during any of the previous visits – now I need it a lot and cannot help wondering if last ts I’ve only seen the “marketing” side of London, you know). But due to that I decided to go and visit some museums. So far I’ve been to the British museum (enjoyed the Asian collection there ad briefly visited others), National gallery (added Claude and Turner to the artists whose works I like) and Science museum (it’s awesome and also a paradise for kids).

What else?

Bought a computer – Lenovo T60 with WinXP. I’ve relied on IBM laptops all my working life and never had any problems (so far so good).

Opened an HSBC bank account: my appointment was scheduled a week after than my call to the bank and the whole process was nice and smooth and took about an hour.

Had an assessment at LBS Fitness Centre and swam my usual 3km per week.

Registered with the police.

Found out how to make free calls to Moscow.

Took an accounting textbook from the library and will make myself read three introductory chapters before the course start (but there are so many things happening here that I simply don’t have much time to sit and read).

Tried Indian food for the first time and liked it!

Despite the fact that there are still some things to do (like registering with a GP), I’m feeling "all settled".Orientation starts next week on Monday!

Saturday, August 11, 2007

London Business School performs reference verification checks for all of the admitted students. This year they sent e-mails to recommenders in the end of July.

To my mind this is strange because of two things:1) July-August are holiday months, so most people are away and unable to reply promptly.2) It's too late to perform any actual checks. Suppose they find something about someone - and the person has already paid a big amount of fees, resigned from job, got visa, moved to London...

This process is not advertised and I only discoverd that because one of my recommenders had changed a job, so his e-mail was no longer valid and I got a request of his current address from admission officer. I submitted the new e-mail and of course wrote\called all of my four recommenders.

You may wonder why am I talking about four recommenders while the school requires just two recommendations? And no, my recommenders don't do extreme programming ;) (for eXtreme Programmers a common practice is to work in pairs). I got two recommenders last year and two more the year before that. That's probably why some schools do not like reapplicants - they have to perform double amount of checks on them :)

Two recommenders replied to the school, before they got my e-mails.Two others returned from holidays, made a heroic attempt to scan their "in" and "spam" folders (you may imagine how many letters a high-level manager would have after two or three weeks away) and... haven't found anything LBS-confirmation-related there. Both of them were the recent recommenders... you see the pattern too, don't you?So I wrote to admission officer asking [for trouble] her whether the remaining confirmations were needed, and she sent the long-awaited e-mails. Hopefully the replies will fly back next Monday - the same day when I head to London myself.

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Small number of posts lately doesn't mean nothing interesting is happening with me. Just the opposite! That's why I'm finally posting this after midnight on Sunday :)

This time I wanted to write about exemption exams at London Business School.The School gives us 4 options:

Managerial Economics (by Masters degree in Economics)

Financial Accounting (by an appropriate professional qualification in Accounting)

Business Statistics (by eligibility test)

IT for Business Value (by exam in Autumn Semester)

All current students recommend to exempt as much as you can.I cannot get away from Economics and Accounting, so I applied for the Statistic test in the beginning of July, was one of the first to get it and started solving right away (only two weeks time for the test).I didn't have a text book (Mik Wisniewski Quantitative Methods for Decision Makers), but I was armed with *rusty-dusty* prior knowledge of statistics and internet connection.

If you are (or will be) in the same shoes, have a look at the following links:

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

The second most important thing in pre-MBA is finding money to finance the course. When I first met a number of admits couple of years ago they were all saying: “Don’t worry about money, get in first, and finances will be sorted automatically”. Yes, upon acceptance to Stanford you fill a questionnaire and the bank says: “You will need the following amount of money. Here you are”. But things are not like that in Europe. Loans are harder to get and scholarships are scarce (in LBS this year ~25% of the class got a scholarship – “only” or “whole” depends on what side of the fence you are). Thus you should start thinking about money before you secure the place in the next class.

Disclaimer: I will write everything I know about the HSBC loan scheme so it is no use asking me for additional guidance. This information is true to the best of my knowledge and up-to-date in June 2007. If you have any other questions, you’d better contact the program officials.

Features:

Maximum amount is £50,000;

No co-signer or guaranties required;

Repayment starts 6 months after the course completion;

No penalties for early repayment.

Myth:Insert-your-country-here nationals have particular difficulties in getting the loan and are often refused.Truth: Only the nationals of Myanmar cannot benefit from this scheme (this has something to do with the list of money-laundering countries). People from all other countries will have no difficulties in receiving the loan once they apply wisely and provide all the necessary documents.

Drawback #1: How much can you apply for?Take two thirds of your net income (take the past 12 months figures without bonuses* and divide by 12). This is what HSBC will consider the maximum amount you’ll be able to repay after getting a job post-MBA.*you’d better clarify if bonuses should be included or not, because I am not sure

Based on current interest rate of 7.75% and repayment period of 84 months (7 years) for two-year MBA program HSBC gives the following figures:Amount £20,000 - monthly repayments: £371Amount £30,000 - monthly repayments: £557Amount £40,000 - monthly repayments: £743Amount £50,000 - monthly repayments: £928Don’t ask me how they got those figures. I tried to check, but the method I was taught at university is not working here, so I will probably have to get an MBA to understand this.

Drawback #2: You cannot apply for the maximum amountI know people whose salary allowed applying for £50,000, who applied for it and were rejected.Actually in borderline cases the bank takes into account multiple things apart from your current salary: likelihood of getting employment in the UK once graduated and other financial commitments.If you know a safe maximum amount to apply for – you’re welcome to write it in comments.

Drawback #3: You need to show the bank how you will pay for the rest of your courseFor example, you apply for £40,000 and after estimating all costs you need another £40,000 for living. You will have to show the bank that you have secured those £40,000.

What documents you’ll need to apply for the loan:

A copy of passport main page (this is for identification purposes. I applied for the loan with one passport and exchanged it after that because it expired – this is fine)

Copies of all bank statements for the previous 3 months (take care and do not have any overdraft on your accounts)

Evidence of earnings for the previous 12 months (salary slips or tax documents or a letter on original letterhead from your employer)

Proof of current residential address

Proof of permanent residential address for non-UK residents if different from above

Other evidence for any funds you have to put towards the cost of the course

Filled application

The photocopy of everything above (to use by LBS)

Other useful things:

All the documents should be issued in English or officially translated.

There is a question in the application whether you own a property or assets and the estimated value of those. Your words will be taken for granted if you won’t use this property\assets towards the cost of the course. Otherwise you will have to provide a recent valuation.

It is assumed that you will provide the bank statement from which your salary incomings will be clear or explain why you cannot provide this statement.

By the way, I found that explanatory letters work very well. Read your complete application out loud and if there are some questions remaining spend one more piece of paper to address them.

If the bank decides you asked for too much – they will reject your application.

If you secure the loan for tuition fees you will not be able to use it towards any other purposes (e.g. living expenses).

LBS takes the administration fee of 1% of the loan. This fee is only charged if you agree to take the loan (because you may apply, secure the loan and then find other sources and decide not to take the loan – in this case administration fee is not charged).

Success story: I initially gathered the documents for about three months – the time was spent on budget calculation, providing evidence of other funds and official translation of the documents.I sent the pack to school by courier in the end of April. In two days I got an e-mail with confirmation of delivery and additional question from financial aid officer. After we clarified the question she sent my application to the bank – and in less than a week there was a positive answer.I suppose that if you apply later, say in August, it may take longer to get the answer, but all in all the decision process is rather fast.

Free you mind for creative thinking by organizing your commitments: write them down and don’t rewind them over in over in your head

Create lists of what you should do, whom are you waiting for reply, what you may want to do someday

Write actions, e.g. “call to book the table” instead of “birthday dinner”. Always ask “what’s the next action?”

Instantly do things that you can accomplish in less than two minutes. If it will take more time, add them to your lists

Review the lists regularly

And a lot more…

I’ve reorganized my lists in Backpack (see earlier post) and the methodology is now working for me! Two lists are my favorite: what I am waiting from someone and Projects - to get a higher perspective on what’s going on.If interested then check out this Wikipedia entry for more details and tools to implement this methodology (I’d like to try the Lotus Notes tool next).